Catálogo de publicaciones - revistas
Annual Review of Public Health
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No disponible.
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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Período | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | desde ene. 1980 / hasta dic. 2023 | Annual Reviews |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
revistas
ISSN impreso
0163-7525
ISSN electrónico
1545-2093
Editor responsable
Annual Reviews Inc.
País de edición
Estados Unidos
Fecha de publicación
1980-
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Cumulative Environmental Impacts: Science and Policy to Protect Communities
Gina M. Solomon; Rachel Morello-Frosch; Lauren Zeise; John B. Faust
Pp. 83-96
Toward Greater Implementation of the Exposome Research Paradigm within Environmental Epidemiology
Jeanette A. Stingone; Germaine M. Buck Louis; Shoji F. Nakayama; Roel C.H. Vermeulen; Richard K. Kwok; Yuxia Cui; David M. Balshaw; Susan L. Teitelbaum
<jats:p> Investigating a single environmental exposure in isolation does not reflect the actual human exposure circumstance nor does it capture the multifactorial etiology of health and disease. The exposome, defined as the totality of environmental exposures from conception onward, may advance our understanding of environmental contributors to disease by more fully assessing the multitude of human exposures across the life course. Implementation into studies of human health has been limited, in part owing to theoretical and practical challenges including a lack of infrastructure to support comprehensive exposure assessment, difficulty in differentiating physiologic variation from environmentally induced changes, and the need for study designs and analytic methods that accommodate specific aspects of the exposome, such as high-dimensional exposure data and multiple windows of susceptibility. Recommendations for greater data sharing and coordination, methods development, and acknowledgment and minimization of multiple types of measurement error are offered to encourage researchers to embark on exposome research to promote the environmental health and well-being of all populations. </jats:p>
Pp. 315-327
The Urgency of Addressing Climate Change
Jonathan E. Fielding; Ross C. Brownson; Lawrence W. Green
Palabras clave: Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health; General Medicine.
Pp. v-vi
A Literature Review of the Effects of Air Pollution on COVID-19 Health Outcomes Worldwide: Statistical Challenges and Data Visualization
A. Bhaskar; J. Chandra; H. Hashemi; K. Butler; L. Bennett; Jacqueline Cellini; Danielle Braun; Francesca Dominici
<jats:p> Several peer-reviewed papers and reviews have examined the relationship between exposure to air pollution and COVID-19 spread and severity. However, many of the existing reviews on this topic do not extensively present the statistical challenges associated with this field, do not provide comprehensive guidelines for future researchers, and review only the results of a relatively small number of papers. We reviewed 139 papers, 127 of which reported a statistically significant positive association between air pollution and adverse COVID-19 health outcomes. Here, we summarize the evidence, describe the statistical challenges, and make recommendations for future research. To summarize the 139 papers with data from geographical locations around the world, we also present anopen-source data visualization tool that summarizes these studies and allows the research community to contribute evidence as new research papers are published. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health; General Medicine.
Pp. 1-20
On-the-Go Adaptation of Implementation Approaches and Strategies in Health: Emerging Perspectives and Research Opportunities
Elvin H. Geng; Aaloke Mody; Byron J. Powell
<jats:p> In many cases, implementation approaches (composed of one or more strategies) may need to change over time to work optimally. We use a literature review to inform a mechanistic analysis of such on-the-go adaptations. We suggest that such adaptations of implementation strategies consist of three necessary steps. The first component is the initial effect of the implementation approach on intended implementation, service delivery, or clinical outcomes. Second, these initial effects must in turn be used to modify, alter, intensify, or otherwise change the implementation approach. Third, the modified approach itself has effects. Conceiving of adaptation as all three steps implies that a full understanding of adaptation involves ( a) a sense of initial effects, ( b) conceptualizing and documenting content and rationale for changes in approach (e.g., alteration, intensification), and ( c) the effects of the changed approach (including how the latter effects depend on initial effects). Conceptualizing these steps can help researchers ask questions about adaptation (e.g., thresholds for change, dosing, potentiation, sequencing) to advance our understanding of implementation strategies. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health; General Medicine.
Pp. 21-36
Enhancing Capacity for Food and Nutrient Intake Assessment in Population Sciences Research
Marian L. Neuhouser; Ross L. Prentice; Lesley F. Tinker; Johanna W. Lampe
<jats:p> Nutrition influences health throughout the life course. Good nutrition increases the probability of good pregnancy outcomes, proper childhood development, and healthy aging, and it lowers the probability of developing common diet-related chronic diseases, including obesity, cardiovascular disease, cancer, and type 2 diabetes. Despite the importance of diet and health, studying these exposures is among the most challenging in population sciences research. US and global food supplies are complex; eating patterns have shifted such that half of meals are eaten away from home, and there are thousands of food ingredients with myriad combinations. These complexities make dietary assessment and links to health challenging both for population sciences research and for public health policy and practice. Furthermore, most studies evaluating nutrition and health usually rely on self-report instruments prone to random and systematic measurement error. Scientific advances involve developing nutritional biomarkers and then applying these biomarkers as stand-alone nutritional exposures or for calibrating self-reports using specialized statistics. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health; General Medicine.
Pp. 37-54
Innovations in Public Health Surveillance for Emerging Infections
Peng Jia; Shiyong Liu; Shujuan Yang
<jats:p> Public health surveillance is defined as the ongoing, systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of health data and is closely integrated with the timely dissemination of information that the public needs to know and upon which the public should act. Public health surveillance is central to modern public health practice by contributing data and information usually through a national notifiable disease reporting system (NNDRS). Although early identification and prediction of future disease trends may be technically feasible, more work is needed to improve accuracy so that policy makers can use these predictions to guide prevention and control efforts. In this article, we review the advantages and limitations of the current NNDRS in most countries, discuss some lessons learned about prevention and control from the first wave of COVID-19, and describe some technological innovations in public health surveillance, including geographic information systems (GIS), spatial modeling, artificial intelligence, information technology, data science, and the digital twin method. We conclude that the technology-driven innovative public health surveillance systems are expected to further improve the timeliness, completeness, and accuracy of case reporting during outbreaks and also enhance feedback and transparency, whereby all stakeholders should receive actionable information on control and be able to limit disease risk earlier than ever before. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health; General Medicine.
Pp. 55-74
Early Childhood Education: Health, Equity, and Economics
Robert A. Hahn; W. Steven Barnett
<jats:p> Many low-income and minority children in the United States and globally are at risk of poor educational trajectories and, consequently, diminished life courses, because their households and neighborhoods lack resources to adequately support learning and development prior to formal schooling. This review summarizes evidence on center-based early childhood education (ECE) for three- and four-year-olds as a means of assuring school readiness in cognitive and socioemotional skills. While the details of ECE programs merit further research, it is clear that ECE can benefit children, especially those most disadvantaged, with additional societal benefits and positive long-run economic returns. Universal ECE is not a cure-all, and its success requires ongoing alignment with subsequent education and attention to child household and community conditions. Because resource deprivation is concentrated in low-income and minority communities, publicly funded universal ECE can also be a powerful instrument for the promotion of social equity. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health; General Medicine.
Pp. 75-92
Environmental Justice: Where It Has Been, and Where It Might Be Going
Merlin Chowkwanyun
<jats:p> Taking stock of environmental justice (EJ) is daunting. It is at once a scholarly field, an ongoing social movement, and an administrative imperative adopted by government agencies and incorporated into legislation. Moreover, within academia, it is multidisciplinary and multimethodological, comprising scholars who do not always speak to one another. Any review of EJ is thus necessarily restrictive. </jats:p><jats:p> This article explores several facets of EJ activism. One is its coalitional and “inside-outside” orientation. EJ activists are constantly forming alliances with other stakeholders, but these coalitions do not flout the importance of engaging with formal institutions. The review next turns to one set of such institutions—the courts and regulatory agencies—to see how well EJ claims have fared there. I then survey scientific findings that have been influenced by EJ. The review concludes with future directions for activists and scholars to consider: the changing nature of EJ coalitions, fragmentation within EJ and with other fields, the historical roots of environmental injustice, and opportunities for stronger infusion of the EJ lens. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health; General Medicine.
Pp. 93-111
Health Misinformation Exposure and Health Disparities: Observations and Opportunities
Brian G. Southwell; Jessica Otero Machuca; Sabrina T. Cherry; Melissa Burnside; Nadine J. Barrett
<jats:p> The concepts of health misinformation and health disparities have been prominent in public health literature in recent years, in part because of the threat that each notion poses to public health. How exactly are misinformation proliferation and health disparities related, however? What roles might misinformation play in explaining the health disparities that we have documented in the United States and elsewhere? How might we mitigate the effects of misinformation exposure among people facing relatively poor health outcomes? In this review, we address such questions by first defining health disparities and misinformation as concepts and then considering how misinformation exposure might theoretically affect health decision-making and account for disparate health behavior and health outcomes. We alsoassess the potential for misinformation-focused interventions to address health disparities based on available literature and call for future research to address gaps in our current evidence base. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health; General Medicine.
Pp. 113-130